G7 leaders demand Crimea referendum be put on hold
The statement came in response to Crimea’s parliament voting to join Russia and setting a referendum for Sunday on the decision, in a dramatic escalation of the crisis over the Ukrainian Black Sea peninsula.
The G7 leaders said they would not recognise the outcome of the referendum, which they said “would have no legal effect”, calling it a “deeply flawed process which would have no moral force” because of the presence of Russian troops in the region.
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Hide AdRussian efforts to annex Crimea, a region in southern Ukraine that is home to the Russian Black Sea fleet, would violate five different bilateral and international agreements, including the United Nations charter, the G7 leaders said in a statement released by the White House.
It also “could have grave implications for the legal order that protects the unity and sovereignty of all states”, they said.
“Should the Russian Federation take such a step, we will take further action, individually and collectively,” the G7 statement said.
The leaders called on Russia to withdraw its forces in Crimea, begin talks with Ukraine and allow international observers into the region.
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Hide AdPresident Barack Obama was scheduled to meet Ukrainian prime minister Arseny Yatsenyuk at the White House yesterday.
The United States has said it is prepared to sanction Russia over the Crimea issue, and European Union member states agreed the wording on sanctions yesterday.
The G7 group includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, the European Council and the European Commission.
In 1998, it added Russia to form the G8. Russia is scheduled to hold the next Group of Eight summit in Sochi in June, but the leaders of the G7 have suspended planning for that meeting because of the crisis in Ukraine.
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Hide Ad“We also remind the Russian Federation of our decision to suspend participation in any activities related to preparation of a G8 Sochi meeting until it changes course,” the leaders said.
Crimea has strong cultural ties to Russia. Russian president Vladimir Putin has said Russia has not been acting in Crimea but allowing local self-defence units to act spontaneously – an assertion derided as “Putin’s fiction” by Washington.